Where Cancel Culture Must Go Next

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(American Thinker) – For cancel culture, slavery is the original sin of the United States. It is an eternal and indelible sin for which there can be no forgiveness or redemption. No amount of groveling will lessen the magnitude of the sin. Not even attempting to atone for the sin with affirmative action, Black History Month, civil rights legislation, DIE, Juneteenth, the Martin Luther King holiday, the election of a black president and vice president, and the recent appointments of unqualified black women to the Supreme Court and the presidency of Harvard College reduce or nullify the sin. In fact, for cancel culture, as the gap between the end of slavery and the present increases, so does the debt on the sin.

Lest we forget the everlasting sin of slavery, cancel culture frequently finds ways to remind us. One way is by pointing out the Founding Fathers who owned slaves. Thomas Jefferson is often mentioned, not only because he owned slaves, but because some believe he has the additional sin of having had a sexual relationship with a female slave. As a result, cancel culture forced schools with Jefferson’s name to be renamed and a statute of him to be removed from New York’s City Hall. In addition to the Founding Fathers, Robert E. Lee is an easy target for cancel culture because of his association with the Confederacy. Thus, cancel culture bought about the removal of his statues from a historic area in Richmond and the U.S. Capitol. Attempts to remove Lee’s name from Washington and Lee University failed, but cancel culture was able to cancel his horse.

Unfortunately for cancel culture, attacking statues, school names, long dead white guys, and a horse is getting old. After all, slavery, which ended 160 years ago, is simply not as pressing an issue as current issues, such as inflation or the millions of illegals infesting our country. Thus, it is becoming more difficult to convince those who never owned slaves that they should feel guilty and pay…

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